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greenleaf
21-11-2007, 10:07 PM
The back-end of a termite is an odd place to look to solve the world's energy crisis but scientists believe the insects' guts may hold the key to better and cheaper biofuels.

Researchers said on Wednesday they had identified a rich reservoir of wood-digesting enzymes exuded by bacteria living in the bellies of termites.

The efficient processes the insects use to turn wood into food could one day be harnessed in factories to transform wood into fuel for transport as an alternative to crops like corn.

The discovery follows a genome-wide analysis of bacteria from the hindgut of the Nasutitermes termite species in Costa Rica, published in the science journal Nature.

Soaring oil prices and concerns about climate change have triggered a boom in biofuels produced from renewable resources like sugar, corn and soybeans.

But making gasoline substitutes from wood -- a plentiful but tougher biomass source -- has so far proved elusive.
http://img144.imageshack.us/img144/1427/termitespeciesxg9.jpg
Termites, whose voracious appetite for wood causes massive damage to homes worldwide, have no such problems. In fact, their intestines are astonishingly efficient bioreactors, or chemical processing chambers.

Now the secret of how they convert wood into sugars is starting to be unlocked by scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, the California Institute of Technology and biotechnology company Verenium.

Scientist Falk Warnecke and colleagues used industrial-scale DNA sequencing to show that the guts of termites contain a huge range of bacterial genes responsible for making many previously unknown enzymes.

The next step will be to figure out the precise role of these enzymes and eventually to synthesise them for use in engineering schemes that can convert wood into biofuels, such as hydrogen or ethanol.

The potential is considerable, given the sheer efficiency of the termite's intestines, which can theoretically turn one sheet of paper into two litres of hydrogen, according to Andreas Brune of the Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology in Marburg, Germany.

"Good food is today being turned into fuel instead of being fed to people. If we could make ethanol from wood waste instead that would clearly be a good thing," Brune said.

(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Elisabeth O'Leary)


full story source: Termite guts may hold key to better biofuels (http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20071121/tts-uk-termites-biofuel-a8bf950_1.html)

de_shit
22-11-2007, 01:15 AM
Nice find dude. But there is one problem with that solution to the energy crisis. Wood means cutting down trees, and we're already doing so. Why destroy even MORE of the Earth?

thomps1d
08-12-2007, 05:53 PM
Nice find dude. But there is one problem with that solution to the energy crisis. Wood means cutting down trees, and we're already doing so. Why destroy even MORE of the Earth?

I think there are two key considerations that make the idea noteworthy:

1) Wood is a renewable resource, so we would be able to plant and harvest trees specifically for this purpose. It's still damaging to the environment, but when the alternative is conventional fossil fuels...

2) This type of enzyme could theoretically be modified to convert other materials into viable fuel sources. Imagine an enzyme that could 'eat' plastic and convert it to fuel that could be used for any number of purposes - that is the biggest strength of this type of research.

garth
09-12-2007, 12:42 PM
I think there are two key considerations that make the idea noteworthy:

1) Wood is a renewable resource, so we would be able to plant and harvest trees specifically for this purpose. It's still damaging to the environment, but when the alternative is conventional fossil fuels...

2) This type of enzyme could theoretically be modified to convert other materials into viable fuel sources. Imagine an enzyme that could 'eat' plastic and convert it to fuel that could be used for any number of purposes - that is the biggest strength of this type of research.

Interesting find, thanks.

The article quotes wood waste as a fuel source, but the large majority of the worlds harvested timber fiber waste is already utilised for the production of paper, MDF, OSB & chip board, or it is used for heat production at the mill. There is very little wood waste from modern timber processing. So the use of new plantation fiber would have to be the case or as you suggest the use of other recyclables like paper & cardboard.